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Book Salad

Tuesday 30th September

Venue
Topping & Company Booksellers of St Andrews, 7 Greyfriars Garden, St Andrews, Fife KY16 9HG
Doors Open
6.20pm
Start Time
7pm
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Book Salad meets on the last Tuesday of every month. To make a salad you put together lots of different things you'd like to eat, and we do the same. Every month, instead of reading one kind of book, we mix genres. We tend to read mostly imaginative fiction but occasionally we pick non-fiction, even more occasionally a graphic novel, by authors from different ages and backgrounds.

For our September book, we will read 'The Bucket' by Allan Ahlberg, who wrote some of the most wonderful children's books with his wife Janet, who illustrated them. They produced many but favourites include 'Peepo!', 'Each Peach Pear Plum', 'Cops and Robbers', and 'Funny Bones'.

Janet died in 1994, and Allan continued to publish books with other illustrators including their daughter Jessica. You may have read that Allan died a couple of weeks ago. In 2014, he published his memories of childhood, 'The Bucket', which I spotted on a shelf in the bookshop earlier this year. It's a book of short chapters, poems, and fragments.

Here's the publisher's blurb:

'"My mother, who was not my mother, I see her now, her raw red cleaner's hands twisting away at her apron as she struggled to speak. Adoption was a shameful business then in many people's eyes, the babies being mostly illegitimate. Better not speak of it."

Allan Ahlberg was adopted as a baby. In 1938 he was picked up in London by his new mother and taken back to Oldbury in the Black Country. Now one of the most successful children's book writers in the world, in The Bucket he describes an oddly enchanted childhood lived out in an industrial town during the 1940s, in conditions which today we might describe as 'deprived'. He writes of a father in overalls smelling of wood shavings and oil, of a tough and fiercely protective mother who cries when he discovers that he is adopted, of life assurance policies ('£6 if the child dies under age 3') and fearsome bacon slicers, of half-remembered trips to his mother's sister's grave and to the bluebell woods. And of his first days at school: 'Allan could do much better. He is most inattentive and dreamy at times' (school report, December 1946).

Using a mix of prose and poetry, supported by new drawings by his daughter Jessica and old photographs, The Bucket retrieves a childhood which lovers of Ahlberg's classic picturebooks The Baby's Catalogue, Burglar Bill and Peepo! might feel they have glimpsed before but which are now exquisitely brought to life.'

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If you want to join us on the last Tuesday of September you'll be very welcome.